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Le duel silencieux

Original title: Shizuka naru kettô
  • 1949
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
4.2K
YOUR RATING
Le duel silencieux (1949)
Drama

A surgeon gets syphilis from a patient when he cuts himself during an operation. The doctor's life is destroyed, but unlike the patient, he doesn't destroy others along with him.A surgeon gets syphilis from a patient when he cuts himself during an operation. The doctor's life is destroyed, but unlike the patient, he doesn't destroy others along with him.A surgeon gets syphilis from a patient when he cuts himself during an operation. The doctor's life is destroyed, but unlike the patient, he doesn't destroy others along with him.

  • Director
    • Akira Kurosawa
  • Writers
    • Kazuo Kikuta
    • Akira Kurosawa
    • Senkichi Taniguchi
  • Stars
    • Toshirô Mifune
    • Takashi Shimura
    • Miki Sanjô
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    4.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Akira Kurosawa
    • Writers
      • Kazuo Kikuta
      • Akira Kurosawa
      • Senkichi Taniguchi
    • Stars
      • Toshirô Mifune
      • Takashi Shimura
      • Miki Sanjô
    • 23User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos42

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Toshirô Mifune
    Toshirô Mifune
    • Dr. Kyoji Fujisaki
    Takashi Shimura
    Takashi Shimura
    • Dr. Konosuke Fujisaki
    Miki Sanjô
    • Misao Matsumoto
    Kenjirô Uemura
    Kenjirô Uemura
    • Susumu Nakada
    Chieko Nakakita
    Chieko Nakakita
    • Takiko Nakada
    Noriko Sengoku
    Noriko Sengoku
    • Apprentice Nurse Rui Minegishi
    Jyonosuke Miyazaki
    • Cpl. Horiguchi
    Isamu Yamaguchi
    • Patrolman Nosaka
    Shigeru Matsumoto
    • Boy with appendicitis
    Hiroko Machida
    • Nurse Imai
    Kan Takami
    • Laborer
    Kisao Tobita
    • Boy with typhoid
    Shigeyuki Miyajima
    • Officer
    Tadashi Date
    Tadashi Date
    • Father of boy with appendicitis
    Etsuko Sudo
    • Mother of boy with appendicitis
    Seiji Izumi
    • Policeman
    Masateru Sasaki
    • Old Soldier
    Ken'ichi Miyajima
    • Dealer
    • Director
      • Akira Kurosawa
    • Writers
      • Kazuo Kikuta
      • Akira Kurosawa
      • Senkichi Taniguchi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    7.34.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8RNQ

    Splendid actors

    An admonitory melodrama movingly sustained by splendid acting. Toshiro Mifune would later play a different sort of strong and silent character (John Wayne's an unworthy comparison). Here the silence is pulled inward, the head often drooped, the silence a wish not to offend. No wonder it's like the female characters are pounding on the door of this tall, handsome man when he cannot open himself to them. He's doing noble work as a physician, and fortunately the sombre story is sometimes lightened with patients grateful for cure, as it is in a way by his irresponsible double with whom he shares a probably incurable infection. Well set-up scenes often beautifully photographed, like the detail of rainwater dripping into a pan during a wartime jungle operation, coming after the surgeon has asked the patient's pulse to be monitored.
    10dorlago

    Brilliant but flawed!

    As in "Drunken Angel" this film uses illness as a allegory to symbolize Japanese society after WW2. Though not as powerful "The Quiet Duel" does have some fine moments. The beginning sequence is beautifully filmed. All the Kurosawa techniques are there. The play of light, the pounding rain storm, the purposefully annoying fan, and the haunting music give this intro stunning power and make the rest of the film rather pale in comparison. The acting at times tends to be a little melodramatic but the characters are convincing even if their motives are questionable. I won't go into details. I don't want to give the story away. This film contains what I think is one of the best scenes between Mifune and Shimura. It is the magical, simple, and poignant musical cigarette box scene. An interesting point....... Watch this and then watch "Drunken Angel". Many of the same sets and props were used. Shimura's office in "Drunken Angel" and Mifune's office in "The Quiet Duel" are almost identical.
    8lastliberal

    I have to have the conscience of a doctor, and the conscience of a man. It is hard.

    One rarely, if ever goes wrong watching a film directed by Akira Kurosawa and starring Toshirô Mifune, even if it one of the early ones. In this film, however, the star is not Mifune, but the man who plays his father, Takashi Shimura, destined to achieve greater fame in Ikiru, and The Seven Samurai.

    Mifune comes back from the war with Syphilis, a disease he contracted during an operation. He must make drastic changes in his life starting with his finance of six years, Miki Sanjo. He finds the man who gave him the disease, and spends his energy trying to get him to stop spreading it, horrified that he has a pregnant wife.

    Noriko Sengoku (Stray Dog, Drunken Angel, Blind Beast) plays a self-absorbed nurse trainee and provides comedy to an otherwise depressing film. She transforms after having a baby she didn't want, and after learning of Mifune's plight. She is a talented performer in this film showing many facets.
    8TheLittleSongbird

    An impressive film if not one of Kurosawa's best

    I find Akira Kurasawa to be not just the Master of Japanese cinema but also one of the all-time great directors. The Silent Duel is not one of the finest examples of why I think that, I do think it could've been longer and I did feel that the narrative while having a great idea and having some very moving moments especially in the final act has some clumsy patches. However, it is delicately directed and is made absolutely beautifully with well-compositioned cinematography and striking scenery. The score has a haunting sense of coolness, while the acting is excellent. Toshiro Mifune would give more remarkable performances in other Kurosawa films with characters more multi-layered than here, however he does play noble very well. Takashi Shimura would later give one of the most heartbreaking performances in all of film in Ikiru, but gives a likewise commanding performance. Norika Serigoku is also wonderful, her character is annoying at first but you do warm to her later on, and Serigoku where self-absorbed or touching does convey those characteristics very well. In a nutshell, Kurosawa has done better in my view, but I found much still to be impressed about. 8/10 Bethany Cox
    7Quinoa1984

    well-acted melodrama that isn't one of Kurosawa's best

    Every Akira Kurosawa film is at least interesting, and even in a work like The Quiet Duel, which is designed possible as something of a 'minor' work in the director's cannon, there's things about it that are striking and exceptional. The opening scene of the doctor, played by Toshiro Mifune, operating on the patient who will change his life forever, has a double-sided tension to it about not just the fate of the operation but of something else (this helps if you don't know what is going to happen). The way the scene is cut, the effect of the rain outside, the pan at the floor, the rain falling on the pan and making the one louder sound, it all amounts of a near-classic Kurosawa scene. This and the climax are, arguably, the best scenes of what is otherwise a good if shaky melodrama.

    The problem might just be that I'm not tuned into this tearjerker side of Kurosawa, at least one that isn't as well-cooked, so to speak, as some of his best efforts. The premise is really good, as a doctor contracts syphilis by a mistake while operating on a patient during the war, and has to treat himself with medicine and cannot find a way to tell his to-be wife about his ailment (or, in fact, why he cannot marry). And saying that this isn't entirely 'well-cooked' is to say that the premise, while fascinating, doesn't entirely develop into a fully fascinating story. There are patches that seem to kind of coast, like something one might see on day-time television (not quite soap opera but close), and it's only in the last third that things really start to pick up dramatically.

    Thankfully, Mifune is on his A-game as usual with his best collaborator at the helm, particularly in a scene where he (uncharacteristically for Kurosawa) breaks down in tears after seeing his once-possible-wife off to marry someone else, and there's a strange, cool mixture of musical instruments on the soundtrack- not quite what one would expect for a melodrama (i.e. xylophone, harmonica, harps, accordions). By the climax, as I said, it gets very good with the original patient Takata coming back in a drunken, syphilis-infected frenzy to the hospital. It just isn't enough, overall, to recommend it as highly as Kurosawa's best; Red Beard and Drunken Angel, also starring Mifune, are much better as medical/hospital dramas. 7.5/10

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    Related interests

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film was the first film Kurosawa directed outside of Toho, as it was a co-production between Daiei Studios and the newly formed Art Film Association, of which Kurosawa was a founding member.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Konosuke Fujisaki: If he had been happy, he might have become just a snob.

    • Connections
      Featured in Kurosawa Akira kara no messêji: Utsukushii eiga o (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Bengawan Solo
      Written by Gesang

      (uncredited)

      The melody's heard in the police station when Fujisaki talked to Nakata

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 13, 1949 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • The Quiet Duel
    • Filming locations
      • Daiei Studios, Tokyo, Japan(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Daiei Studios
      • Daiei
      • Film Art Association
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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